Those living in San Jose's normally pet-friendly Parkview neighborhood say someone is targeting their pets.

On Sunday, Lorraine Van Eaton was gardening in her front yard when she heard a cat's meow.

"It was Putter! But he wasn't putting put his foot down," she said. "He hadn't been there before, so he was obviously moving."

#ALERT Someone is shooting pets with a pellet gun in San Jose’s Parkview neighborhood. A neighbor found Putter, bleeding in her front yard. At the vet, doctors learned this was the SECOND time the poor cat was shot. A month-old pellet was also found in Putter. #abc7nowpic.twitter.com/hI2bjfdLSx

Putter’s owners, the Beyer family, shared this x-ray. It shows pellet fragments lodged inside the cat’s body. A scab the family noticed a month ago was actually an older entry wound. The most recent shot missed Putter’s head by two inches and landed near his spine. Wow. #abc7nowpic.twitter.com/lC7CuqXGLQ

The most recent shot missed Putter's head by two inches, and landed near his spine.

"His front leg's not operable. It's just not moving," he said. "So, we don't know yet. Time will tell if he'll be able to use it again."

“His front leg’s not operable. It’s just not moving. So, we don’t know yet. Time will tell if he’ll be able to use it again,” Stephen Beyer told me. Someone in San Jose’s Parkview neighborhood is shooting family cats. I’ll have details at 11 p.m. #abc7nowpic.twitter.com/kLaUorNe4N

Stephen explains why this behavior is alarming, "They do say that it starts with animals and then it- they escalate. This is definitely a mental issue that needs to be taken care of."

Some owners are now limiting their cat's outdoor time. Though they admit doing so isn't easing concern that someone in the neighborhood is shooting family pets.

Putter's owners shared the following link to a GoFundMe page. They tell me money will be used to assist in Putter's recovery effort, and also will be donated to animal welfare organizations: https://t.co/oplb8OYeEN#abc7now

Van Eaton explained, "We have two cats, and it's just a hard time understanding how someone can do something like that."

Putter's owners are counting their blessings, considering the outcome could have been much worse. "It was two inches from his head. It only took one head-shot and he would've been dead," Stephen told ABC7 News.

The Beyer's encourage anyone who might suspect a scab on their pet could be something more, to get an x-ray.

They've also created this GoFundMe page to assist in Putter's recovering, and to donate to animal welfare organizations.